theconcealedweapon:

Conservatives: “Get a job or starve to death.”

Conservatives: “Quit demanding better pay. You voluntarily chose to work for them. If you feel like you’re being paid too little, you can just quit. No one threatened you with death if you didn’t work for them, especially not me just five seconds ago.”

werewolfscience:

greenseer:

A fun thing to do when people accuse you of “thinking people should just have stuff HANDED TO THEM! ! !” Is to just cold be like yes. I absolutely do believe that. I think every single person should have their needs met unconditionally without ever having to prove that they “deserve” it based on arbitrary criteria of usefulness. You got me. Busted.

#human….#rights?????????#WHAT A CONCEPT

missmentelle:

Health insurance is a mental health issue. I can’t help a client who can’t afford to see me. 

Housing is a mental health issue. I can’t use therapy to help a client whose depression and anxiety come directly from sleeping in the streets. 

Food insecurity is a mental health issue. I can’t help a client who isn’t taking their medication because their pills say “take with food” and they have nothing to eat.

Healthcare is a mental health issue. I can’t help a client whose “depression” is actually a thyroid condition they can’t afford to get treated. 

Wages are a mental health issue. I can’t help a client whose anxiety comes from the fact that they are one missed shift away from not being able to make rent.

Child care is a mental health issue. I can’t help a client who works 80 hours per week to afford daycare, and doesn’t have the time or energy left to come see me. 

Drug policing is a mental health issue. I can’t help a client who ended up in prison because they got caught self-medicating with illegal substances. 

Police brutality is a mental health issue. I can’t help a client whose ‘anxiety’ is a very real and justified fear of ending up as a hashtag. 

If you’re going to make a stand for improving mental health, you have to understand that addressing mental health goes way beyond hiring more therapists and talking about mental health on social media. If we’re really serious about tackling this mental health problem as a country, it means rolling up our sleeves and taking down the barriers that prevent people from getting the help they need – even if those people are different than us, lead different lives, and make choices we don’t agree with. 

We aren’t “fixing” mental health unless we’re fixing it for everybody. 

godasiyo:

Me: capitalism is bad i think im a socialist lets see what thats all about

Every anti capitalism post on here: dont even breath near me if youre a neo trotskyist can we talk about how joe burger uprooted the primemedicalist structure of the early 1800s Soviet union or is that too tankie anarcho maoist

Me, now sobbing: please sir im a dumbass

pustluk:

terrnovella:

pustluk:

terrnovella:

pustluk:

pustluk:

“if we don’t have prisons, what do we do with violent criminals, rapists and murderers?”

idk but how about we don’t subject them to inhumane living conditions, deprive them of basic healthcare, expose them to physical and sexual abuse, or compel them into forced labor?

how about investing in an actual rehabilitative mode of justice that isn’t designed to encourage recidivism and where people have the opportunity to be taught to function safely and effectively among others, even if that process has to happen away from the bulk of society?

how about creating an adequate social safety net for survivors of physical and sexual violence to grieve and recover from trauma without having to worry about keeping a roof over their heads and food on the table?

how about fostering the strong social bonds that have been destroyed by capitalism so that people can actually have a supporting community and, like, care about each other’s wellbeing?

how about dismantling structural and institutional motivators or enablers of violence and abuse–especially a nuclear family that isolates children and exposes them to predators?

idk y’all i’m probably the wrong person to ask and smarter people than me have thought and written about this but like there are other answers here

@keys-close-doors: And then I’m over here like… fuck them have them rot

does anyone else ever want to see a Venn diagram of ‘people who support the prison system’ and ‘people who’ve never known someone who’s been to jail’ or like is that just me

While I agree wholeheartedly with what is being said, some criminals absolutely do not deserve humane living conditions. (Rapists, pedophiles, people that like to torture others, etc.) They deserve straight up death.

if you’re going to enter into a conversation about post-carceral justice with a list of people you personally think deserve to be executed, you should probably find another conversation.

So, let me get this straight. You think someone who enjoys hurting others, who enjoys to rape children or burn down buildings or do any number of other horrible things, deserves to be treated well? 
While I agree that petty thieves or people who have been raised on violence should absolutely be treated the same as anyone else, someone who exists to do nothing but hurt others absolutely does not.

if you can’t spot any difference between ‘treated well’ and ‘not deprived of healthcare or compelled into forced labor within a system designed specifically to enslave black people following the 13th amendment’; and if you seriously believe there are people who just exist solely to deserve being executed with zero context or qualification, we have nothing to talk about.

also, like, yeah this post is explicitly about criminalized violence. first sentence.

commanderboshtette:

badgyal-k:

cocoacallalily:

nabyss:

meanmisscharles:

phoenix-ace:

redmensch:

this student walk out against school shootings is intriguing because it will create a generation of teens with mass strike experience. that has never happened before and could maybe have implications for how they go on to think about politics in terms of mass action

Its happened before, they just werent the right complexion, so they were criminalized, locked up and demonized.

People just rewrite history and facts like some of us aren’t paying attention…

☝☝☝☝ Do not erase us to prop your movement.

👆🏿👆🏿👆🏿

Wowwwww lmao

this is exactly what i’ve been talking about… like nevermind even going back to civil rights movement or the vietnam war or iraq or any of the other well known eras of mass student protests & walkouts – in the past decade this has been happening. it’s not distant memory, and yet somehow it’s ‘never been done before’ and ppl like oprah and obama are out here making claims that it ~hasn’t happened since selma~, as though they haven’t spent the last 6+ years degrading and promoting the use of tear gas and “rubber” bullets against the teens protesting. and i swear it’s like the second there was an opportunity to deracialize “stop killing us,” everyone jumped on it. 

tl;dr the only way “that has never happened before” could ever be true is if you’re ignoring all of world history

Confession:

darkladynyara:

mikkeneko:

sassafrasjungle:

mumblingsage:

blue-author:

the-goddamazon:

I’ve never read Ayn Rand.

I hear so much flagrant shit about her books. The gist I got was she hates poor people and blames poor people for being poor or something?

But there’s gotta be more to it than that. I remember Borders having Atlas Shrugged on fucking display for a while.

So SOMEONE is buying into her bullshit.

The thing is, her books aren’t explicitly about how awful poor people is. Her books are about how awesome her self-reliant True Individual heroes are, which is part of what makes them appealing to so many people who are young and impressionable.

It’s the implications of the philosophy that is being advanced in her books (and which she articulates in her non-fiction books) that leads to the “screw poor people” stuff.

And the thing is, the books aren’t even good at showing the thing they supposedly show. They all are supposed to be teaching us great truths about human nature, but they ignore what human nature is and show what Rand thinks it should be. It’s like reading some alien’s fan fiction, written based on garbled descriptions and wild imaginings about what human life is like.

For instance, the Fountainhead’s protagonist is Howard Roark, the only architect in the world who is a True Individual who Doesn’t Follow The Crowd and Thinks For Himself.

But his individualism and supposed great creative genius consists of… making the most boring buildings imaginable and then insisting that this is the only correct way to do it and anybody who disagrees or deviates from his vision is objectively wrong.

His approach allows for no creativity, no individual expression, no decorative flourishes, nothing cultural or artistic. He looks at a site, and then comes up with the most utilitarian building possible to suit the practical needs of the project given the site. His design is presented as being the objectively (or Objectively) correct design, and anyone else’s design is judged by how much it deviates from the single correct answer.

So if 100 architects all submit different plans, they’e all sheep for not having the courage to see the one logically right answer.The more their answers vary, the more they are sheep.

And she writes the story in such a way that all the art and expression in architecture for thousands of years is a corruption that leaves people feeling hollow and empty. Think about the most soaring and inspiring religious art in architecture. The most beautiful buildings. In her story, the idea that these places inspire anything but conformity in the viewer is a lie we’ve been forced to believe, but looking at Howard Roark’s cracker box buildings makes our spirits soar.

This might just be written off as bad storytelling, but it reflects how she lived her life. Rand led a circle of “free-thinking intellectuals” where one’s free-thinkingness was measured in terms of one’s agreement with the group; i.e., with her.

Did you see that ridiculous letter to Cat Fancy going around where Rand talks about how she doesn’t feel anything about cats, she reasons that they have objective value? That’s not her being silly (on purpose) or suggesting “My dear person, you don’t understand how much I like cats.” As part of her deep-seated belief that she is an objectively rational human being, she convinced herself that all of her tastes and feelings are deeply rational conclusions. 

So in her fable about individualism and the human spirit, the architectural flourishes that she finds silly and gaudy aren’t just not to her taste, they are objectively wrong and a sign of how oppressed the human spirit has become.

She even conducted her romantic affairs in this manner. When she essentially left her husband for a younger man (though I believe they stayed marry), she explained it to him that it was the rationally correct decision to make and if he didn’t agree then his whole life as an intellectual had been a lie. When her younger beau eventually dumped her, she made a similar declaration about him.

So this is the background of Ayn Rand: a woman who is as ruled by prejudice, superstition, and emotion as anyone else on the planet, but is so invested in the idea of being rational and objective that she convinced that whatever passion moves her must be the utter expression of pure reason.

And this woman has—as so many do—a deep suspicion of the idea that other people are getting something for nothing, and this suspicion leads to resentment. More understandably, she has a suspicion of anything that smacks of communism or government-backed redistribution from being a firsthand witness to the excesses of the USSR.

But rather than thinking about her feelings and where they come from, or examining her conclusions, she simply concludes that everything she feels is itself pure reason, and then articulates a philosophy around it.

And this gives us Atlas Shrugged, which is again about the triumph of the individual, but again in a very twisted way.

She takes the idea that all human beings are entitled to the fruits of their labor and posits that the only human beings who really labor are the people at the top of the capitalism food chain.

Reading the story, it’s apparent that she sees the world as a kind of steampunk AU where people who singlehandedly create unique and unreproducible technological breakthroughs are the drivers of the economy, not people who work and buy things, not venture capitalists and people who have inherited gobs of money and power.

True Individuals in Atlas Shrugged are people who are clever and brave and selfish (which is considered a virtue in her writing) enough that they should be rich and ruling the world, and the fact that they don’t is another sign of how corrupt the world is. This is why it resonates with so many people (and the particular people it does) so deeply: it tells them that they should be in charge, they should be rich, they should have everything, and the fact that they don’t is because of Moochers, Looters, and Takers (everyone else.)

Selfishness is a virtue, altruism is a sin, and anything done for the benefit of society rather than oneself is “looting” and the reason that the well-deserving supermen of the world are left with nothing to show for their awesomeness.

The title “Atlas Shrugged” refers to the idea that the titan Atlas who holds up the sky (or in many popular depictions, the world) suffers and toils silently for the benefit of the whole world with no reward might one day have enough of it and put his burden down, see how the world gets along without him.

Which sounds like a rallying cry for labor, right? But this, again, in Rand’s mind and in her bizarre AU fantasy that she calls a philosophical thesis statement, this description does not apply to the mass of human laborers whose work forms the backbone of our life. Those people are takers. Whatever they get is by definition more than they deserve.

John Galt, the “hero” of Atlas Shrugged, is a randpunk inventor who organizes a “strike” of all the other True Individuals, and the wheels of society grind to a halt without their benevolent greed. This is why Tea Partiers and the like talk about “going Galt” or wave signs around that say “Who is John Galt?” (which is Tea Partier for wearing a Guy Fawkes mask). The irony of ironies is that most of these people are working class, which means that they would not be seen as Atlas in her work but as Atlas’s burden.

But as long as they prefer to see themselves as the Bold Individuals Who Would Dare (if not for that darned government and immigrants and homosexuals and communists and witches), they’ll never realize that.

Sorry to the less-interested among my dash for reblogging such a long post, but Rand’s psychology (it’s…not really a philosophy, and my philosophy prof is the only other person I’ve ever seen pick apart her premises & reasoning so thoroughly) rarely gets examined in-depth, and I find it fascinating when it is…also, “randpunk” as a genre name. I kinda wish it existed. So we all knew what to avoid, but still. 

(I am reminded of this xkcd comic)

It dovetails nicely with an educational system which from top to bottom teaches that the only people in the world who have ever been smart or accomplished anything are white men, and the only reason to ever pretend a nonwhite nonman has accomplished anything is magnanimous charity. (Spoiler: that’s the US educational system.)

It also dovetails with another part of US education, that teaches that history is made by *individuals*. Even when they do acknowledge women and people of color, it’s still within a narrative of “this one single person, all alone”. Hence why so few people are aware that Rosa Parks was a trained activist, and why most people have no fucking clue how the Civil Rights movement accomplished what it did.